Sunday, September 9, 2012

Exploring PBL

"Learning by doing" takes on a whole new meaning when it comes to Project Based Learning. My experience with Project Based Learning (PBL) in the classroom has been limited. I have read a bit on the subject, but it was great to have the opportunity to see what PBL actually looks like in the classroom. Just like PBL itself, it takes a lot more than just reading about a topic to fully understand it.

Edutopia is a great website created by The George Lucas Educational Foundation that houses a wealth of resources on teaching and learning strategies that help educators create dynamic 21st century classrooms. The site provides videos, resources, ideas, exemplars, and much more at no cost for the K-12 classroom.

My education in PBL began at Newsome Park Elementary School and the article More Fun Than A Barrel of... Worms?! by Diane Curtis. Students at all grade levels were participating in PBL throughout the school. Projects ranged from learning about, and trading on the New York Stock Exchange and creating their own business, to research about a classmates disease, to becoming "Wormologists." Another great example of PBL came from students at Mountlake High School and was featured in the article Geometry Students Angle Into Architecture Through Project Learning by Sara Armstrong. With this project, students used the math they learned to design and create schools of the future for the year 2050. Yet another example of how PBL can work, with even the youngest students came from students at Rockledge Elementary School as described in the article March of the Monarchs: Students Follow the Butterflies' Migration, also written by Diane Curtis. Here, students tracked the migration path of the monarch butterfly from Canada to Mexico.

While all of these projects covered a wide variety of topics over different grade levels, there were many commonalities to be found. One of the first things I noticed was that there was a flexibility in the curriculum that allowed for these projects to take place. All of the projects were infused with state standards and were cross curricular. Something else that I found exciting about the design of all of the projects was how they incorporated the use of field experts as a resource. They brought in real world experts as resources to support and evaluate the students' work. All of the projects had a variety of end products within each project and they were all cross-curricular. Every project included components from each academic discipline. It provided accessibility for all students at every entry point. Most importantly, all of the projects had students working on real-world issues and had them making connections to the greater world.

The role of the teacher and the students is very different from those in a traditional classroom. The teachers plan the components of the projects so that they are relevant to the students, but the students do the work in educating themselves. They do the work to become the experts on the topic. In the end, they present their projects to an audience as experts and are able to speak knowledgeably on their topic and field questions, as would any field expert. They take pride and ownership of what they have learned and are excited to share it. The teachers' work is mostly in the planning, the support in developing project ideas, creating valuable assessment tools, and to support students during the process. Teachers help by providing feedback and questioning to stimulate thinking in the students. At no point is the teacher teaching the students how to move through their project.

As one student from Newsome Park Elementary stated, "If you find it yourself, it stays in your brain." I think this sums up why educators promote PBL. Teachers provide a time and space for students to explore things that they are interested in learning about. Teachers and students develop their project ideas together, giving students a say in their education process and what they learn. The skills they develop and the knowledge they gain stay with them because it is something they wanted to know or needed to learn to do in order to accomplish their goal. Just as kids will figure out how to beat a video game, only to go on to master the next version, they are able to transfer the skills they learned to use in one project and apply and adapt them to other similar tasks. Project Based Learning is a way to develop critical thinking and life-long skills in students that they can own and use throughout their lives.


Resources


Armstrong, S. (2002). Geometry Students Angle into Architecture Through Project Learning. Retrieved from http://www.edutopia.org/geometry-real-world-students-architects

Curtis, D. (2001). More Fun Than a Barrel of . . . Worms?!. Retrieved from http://www.edutopia.org/more-fun-barrel-worms

Curtis, D. (2002). March of the Monarchs: Students Follow the Butterflies' Migration. Retrieved from  http://www.edutopia.org/march-monarchs

Monday, March 28, 2011

Report Cards for All!

A few weeks ago, I was watching CBS Sunday Morning and they had a little snippet on Parent Report Cards. That got me to thinking about a conversation with my colleagues about the state of our students- how they come to school unkempt, don't do their homework, have frequent absences, and are apathetic towards school/education- and how teachers are being blamed. "Why are we solely being blamed for the failure of our students?" was my thought. Then it came to me... we can't blame the parents! How do you tell a parent that they are not doing a good job raising their child? The Parent Report Card!

The Parent Report Card grades parents on things like: homework completion, student attendance, presence at parent-teacher conferences, response to teacher calls, student attitudes, and the amount of time the child spends watching tv and playing video games. Not such a bad evaluation, right? How many times do, we as teachers, want to ask a parent "Why did --- only get 5 hours sleep? He's sleeping in class." or "When was the last time you read --- a story?" Intruding on the lives of our students with these kinds of questions may seem like just that, an intrusion. But they are all valid questions in the community my school serves.

The new teacher evaluation system is supposed to closely examine teacher performance and use student performance and growth. How about asking student how they feel about their teacher, what their experience is like in the classroom, if they feel like their teacher listens to them. That is the kind of evaluation that is meaningful to me. I want to know if my students feel like I believe in them, that I want the best for them, and that I push them to do better than they have. If kids get a report card, why shouldn't we all get one. Wouldn't a little self-reflection do us all some good?

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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Internet Privacy

I wake up every Sunday morning to the horns of the CBS Sunday Morning theme song. Today, the first story was about a public HS teacher that was forced out because of pictures and a profane word on her Facebook page, that she believed to be private. The school board that fired her claimed to have received a complaint phone call from a parent- which her lawyers later discovered was untrue. As a public school teacher in NYC, I don't really have a fear of being fired for something so puritanic. The program brought up the reality of your "online reputation."

I just spent some time deleting records of myself from a locator website. I know my students are savvy enough to locate a person's information if they have their name, which I try to keep a secret at school. My social network page is private, only friends. Based on all of the information out there online about me, I wonder what my online reputation is. I understand why some of my teacher friends refuse to participate in social networking. I'm considering deleting my account, but do I really want to close myself off from my friends and freedom of expression because of a potential scandal?

Students today are going to have a very difficult time with their online reputation when they get older. They don't realize that th things they post will exist forever. They probably won't remember a third of the stuff the posted on MySpace when they were 14. When we teach our students digital citizenship, we need to include this lesson. Aaron Sorkins says about the movie "Social Network" that no one would want a movie made about their lives when they were 19. Essentially, this is what our students are doing today. They are making a digital record of their lives, at it's least profound stage. While some of my students may not be headed to Harvard or a Fortune 500 company, students everywhere need to be more aware of what they put out there and how it will reflect on their online reputation, and thus their actual reputation.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Welcome to the Classroom

Welcome to the blog. Hopefully I will be able to post links to resources that I discover along the way through the CDIT program and from my personal experiences. I look forward to sharing resources, thinking out loud, and sharing stories of my experiences as a teacher. Enjoy!